LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 58: March 2008 |
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Dear Friends,
I hope you are well. Here we are still busy sending out our
three new books—Lama Yeshe’s Universal
Love and Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s How
Things Exist and Making
Life Meaningful—and working on our new projects,
in particular a couple of weekend seminars conducted by Lama
Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche in the UK and Switzerland in
1975 and 1983 respectively, as I mentioned in our January
e-letter.
Web Updates
We're
still receiving responses to the survey we're conducting about
our free books. Thanks very much to those of you who replied.
You can see the results
to the multiple choice questions here; even more inspiring
are your free-form
comments. If you have not taken the survey, please
take the time to do so. Thank you again.
This month's podcast is another excerpt from Lama Zopa Rinpoche's
commentary and oral transmission of the Golden Light Sutra
given at Maitripa Institute last November 2nd and 3rd. The
entire series is now available here.
We are also working on a major revamp of our website. The
overall design is being updated, and all of the teachings
will be tagged with categories and keywords to make it easier
to find what you're looking for. We'll keep you up to date
as work progresses.
Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s Heart of the Path
Last month I also brought to your attention an incredible
new book we’ll be publishing later this year, Lama Zopa
Rinpoche’s Heart of the Path, a compilation
of more than three decades’ teachings on guru devotion,
expertly edited by our senior editor, Ven. Ailsa Cameron.
At present we’re inviting all of you to contribute
to this amazing project and if you would like to play
a part in bringing these important teachings to the world,
please do so. Thank you so much.
Beatrice Ribush 1913–2008
On
a sadder note, I’d just like to mention the death of
my mother in Melbourne on March 15 and ask you to pray for
her quick enlightenment for the benefit of all sentient beings.
She was a perfect mother and took care of me in the four ways:
she gave me this precious human body, guided me from danger,
supplied me with all temporal needs and oversaw my education.
My father died when I was in my last year of school, so even
though my mother had always been what in those days was called
a housewife and had no business experience, she took over
his jewelry import company in order to put my brother and
me through medical school. Then when I went to Nepal and decided
to stay at Kopan Monastery and become a monk, even though
she was a Jewish mother she totally supported my decision
to drop out of medicine and again helped me financially. I
managed to convince her to come check it out, so she attended
the Fourth Meditation Course in March 1973 and became a Buddhist.
From
that time on she was very close to Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa
Rinpoche and they stayed at her house the first three or four
years they came to Melbourne, 1974–77. She was instrumental
in the early development of Tara Institute and also got involved
with the Buddhist Society of Victoria, where she was treasurer
for fourteen years. When I went to London to run Wisdom Publications
in the 80s and we needed money she lent us tens of thousands
of dollars.
She lived independently at home until the age of 90, still
driving her increasingly dented car, much to our consternation,
but after a rather trivial illness in 2004 it became clear
that she needed round-the-clock care. My brother Dorian and
his former wife Alison, who was like a daughter to my mother
and a sister to me, who had already been helping her over
the years, really stepped up to the plate and employed some
wonderful women to stay with Mum so that she could live out
her years at home with her beloved cat, Kotik. I am so grateful
to both of them, especially Dorian, who paid for all this,
as their taking responsibility allowed me to stay here in
Boston to run the Archive, visiting Australia annually to
see my mother.
A few years ago she had this idea that she’d like to
donate her organs when she died and had a
discussion about organ donation and death in general with
Lama Zopa Rinpoche on one of his visits to Tara Institute.
For a while she was able to do some of the practices he recommended,
but not in recent years.
On March 13 she fell and broke her hip, requiring surgery
under general anesthetic. Unfortunately she did not recover
from this but I really think she was ready to go. Lama Zopa
Rinpoche had already been notified of what was going on, so
upon being notified of her death immediately performed powa
(transferring
the consciousness to a pure land) for her. His Holiness
the Dalai Lama was notified directly and also requested to
pray for her through
FPMT’s Prayers for the Dead service, which is for Rinpoche’s
students and their family members. Mum’s good friend,
the former Tara Institute director Ven. Konchog Dronma (Bonnie
Rothenberg), who lives near Tushita, Dharamsala, went to the
tantric monasteries and has requested many prayers and practices
there, and other things are being done as well.
Lama Zopa Rinpoche has given extensive advices for what to
do for oneself and others when death approaches; you can read
these on our recently-updated pages in the "Transitions"
Section of Rinpoche's Online Advice Book and
find links there to many prayers and practices. When Rinpoche
was in Melbourne in 2006 he visited Mum and felt she was in
a very good space and would have no problems. She had a great
life, a good death and was loved by many. We should all be
so lucky!
As you read this, my wife, Wendy Cook, and I are in Melbourne
for the funeral, which was on Thursday March 20. Thank you
for allowing me to write all this. May my kind mother and
all mother sentient beings quickly come under the care of
perfect vajra gurus like Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche
and reach enlightenment immediately, without a second’s
delay.
Much love,

Nick Ribush
Director
Remembering the Kindness of All
Mother Sentient Beings
Think
on the four kindnesses and the suffering of being kind as
follows:
Even worldly people are grateful for the kindness of the
mother, which extends from conception until death.
(1) My mother has been kind in giving me my precious human
body. Her kindness is responsible for all the opportunities
I have, of making use of my body and leading the sort of life
that I do.
If she hadn’t taken care of me when I was in the womb,
I wouldn’t have been born alive. If she hadn’t
fed me well afterwards, I wouldn’t have enjoyed the
various functions of my physical body, such as using my eyes
to see the most beautiful objects, my ears to hear the most
beautiful sounds, my nose to smell the sweetest perfumes,
my tongue to enjoy the most delicious tastes, or my body to
enjoy sexual love and have many children.
Also, becoming rich by working with my body, speech or mind,
and being skilful and creative with my hands; all this depends
on my mother’s kindness. My mother always took good
care of me, feeding me properly, protecting me from many dangers,
directing my life, and making me study so that I could have
a comfortable life and good reputation.
(2) From the time of my conception she has been worried and
concerned about me. When I was in the womb she worried day
and night, didn’t move as freely as before, and always
took more care of me than of herself, because of the great
love and compassion she had for her baby. She took much care
in eating—renouncing desirable food and eating only
that which would not give me harm, avoiding foods that were
too hot and too cold and so forth.
At the time of my birth, she bore the extreme suffering of
feeling as if her body were about to split apart and had fear
that her life was in danger. If my mother hadn’t wanted
to bear the suffering of childbirth, I wouldn’t have
been born.
When I was a baby, in spite of disgust, she always kept me
clean of ka-ka, pi-pi, snot, etc. She always tried to keep
me warm and protected and gave me the best clothes and food
that she could. She would also keep the best part of her own
food and other enjoyments for me.
My mother told lies to give me a good reputation and to hide
my faults and bad behaviour. To protect me from danger she
fought or did anything possible to help, taking more care
of me than of herself.
All in all, my parents took great care of my life with much
suffering, creating bad karma by making other beings suffer
so that I would be happy.
(3) Moreover, because my present mother has been my mother
in countless human lives, she has been infinitely kind to
me since time without beginning.
Nagarjuna said:
The amount of milk we have drunk from the one mother is
greater than the amount of water in the oceans.
If all the milk I have ever received from my mother could
be collected, it would fill infinite space, and I could continue
to drink it in future lives. Similarly, the food received
from her is as infinite as space, and all my past ka-kas and
pi-pis, the result of that food, would fill an infinite, immense
extension—so would the clothes she gave me, the immense
ocean of tears she shed out of worry for me, and the numberless
bodies she sacrificed to protect my life.
Besides the kindnesses she gave me as a human, there are
those she gave as all different beings, an infinite number
of times each. I have received exactly the same amount of
benefits from each sentient being. Therefore, as my present
mother has been infinitely kind to me, so has every other
sentient being.
(4) Finally, my mother has been extremely kind in educating
me herself and in seeing that I received a good education
throughout my life so that I could become self-sufficient
and have a happy, fulfilling life.
When you have a heavy feeling of this present life’s
mother’s kindness in this and previous lives, think
also how your father has been mother. Then do this meditation
with friends and enemies and then all other sentient beings.
This meditation is with our present mother in her human
body. Then think of her kindness when she had other kinds
of body, such as that of a dog, a bird and so forth. Think
in great detail. Then also do this with father, friend, enemy,
and all other sentient beings.
Colophon
Adapted from Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s Wish-fulfilling
Golden Sun, edited by Nicholas Ribush. Although we
usually try to offer in this space a previously unpublished
teaching, given the circumstances we thought it was apropos.
Thank you.
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